Dream Daddy made waves when it was first launched in 2017, thanks to its cute art style, wealth of dad jokes, and it being one of the first major games to feature such a breadth of gay characters.
Two years later and it's made its way to mobile, so now you can flirt with dads on the go, whether you've cracked on before or you're a fresh-faced babe in the land of dads.
After the obligatory prologue where you meet the range of dads on offer - Grill Dad, Book Dad, Cool Dad, Vampire Dad, the usual - you're then given free reign to message whichever dad you like best on DadBook and go out on a date with them.
And like in other dating sims, you'll need to make the right dialogue choices during these dates to ensure the dads like you and want to keep dating you.
So far, so standard. But Dream Daddy's dialogue manages to elevate the experience, bringing together witty dialogue with sometimes uncomfortable storylines, drifting between silliness and seriousness with relative ease.
It's a very particular humour, of course. If you're not one for terrible puns and other "dad" jokes, you'll probably hate half of what's being said. But it's inoffensive and ridiculous in all the right ways, and it's hard not to enjoy chatting with the other dads as you try and woo them.
Admittedly, these mini-games break up the text-heavy nature of Dream Daddy - it's a dating sim, after all. But like the Newgrounds games that tried this approach long ago, it fails to offer any actual fun, and the mini-games end up just feeling like speed bumps on your path to dad smooching.
There's also no conversation log to fall back on if you miss what's been said. It's a staple in dating sims for good reason - here, its absence feels like a serious blow to the overall experience.
The mobile port isn't exactly spectacular either. Images look a little fuzzy on larger screens, and conversation choices are grouped precariously close together, meaning that fat-fingered players are likely to smudge the wrong option by accident and potentially cost themselves a future date.
You're also sometimes greeted with huge walls of text to sift through, which can be a little jarring and lead to you inching your thumb ever closer to the fast-forward button hovering at the top of the screen at all times.
Its mobile port isn't the greatest, but if you've yet to experience Dream Daddy and want to give it a whirl, it's not a bad place to start.